UC Santa CruzEnvironmental Health & Safety
HomeEnvironmental ProgramsIndustrial HygieneSafetyWaste ManagementLab Research SafetyHazardous Materials Shipping
A-Z Index | Find People

Environmental Health & Safety Dept.
1156 High Street
Santa Cruz, CA 95064

Phone: (831) 459-2553
Fax: (831) 459-3209
Email: ehs@ucsc.edu

--------------

Emergency
Home
Earthquake
Explosion
Fire
Medical
Policy
Security
Violence

--------------

Contact the EHS Staff

--------------

Additional Resources
Campus Directory

--------------

Sitemap | Feedback | Print

 


Explosions

If you have an emergency situation, use any campus phone to dial 911. Campus dispatch will contact the appropriate response group to aid you.

The basic principle of explosion protection is the same worldwide. It is the prevention of flammable materials (gas, vapor, mist, or dust) in dangerous quantities, air (and oxygen), and sources of ignition, all occurring at the same time. Areas where the occurrence of explosive mixtures of flammable materials and air cannot be prevented by applying primary explosion protection require special measures for the prevention of ignition sources to be taken.

In a heterogeneous environment like UCSC, there are literally hundreds of possible explosion scenarios, from equipment to chemical. Laboratories are the obvious place to expect explosive events, and there have been at least four such incidents in the past ten years, including a centrifuge and a reactive chemical accident involving sodium. Please ensure that your emergency procedures are up to date, all departmental personnel are trained on them, and you employ the best possible safety practices when working with or near any material or machine that presents an explosive hazard. This includes the use of hot work permits in areas near hazardous materials storage, and using intrinsicaly safe equipment in hazardous atmospheres.

UCSC Experiences

Lyophilizer explosion in Sinsheimer, March 2001

Explosion Safety on the Web

Centrifuge explosion at Cornell University

Gas cylinder explosion in fume hood at University of Nevada at Reno

Basics of explosion protection from R. Stahl, Inc.

Explosion prevention from Control Engineering Online

Dust explosion prevention basics from Powder and Bulk Engineering